IBM adds API tools to Bluemix serverless framework

Nearly every major cloud now offers a option: AWS Lambda, Azure Functions, Google Cloud Functions, and IBM , to name a few. APIs are for serverless, but few people want to build APIs on a system that doesn’t provide higher-order management functions for them.

IBM’s latest set of add-ons for its Bluemix OpenWhisk serverless framework tackles the issue by providing lifecycle management tools for APIs built in the system.

Connect and go

The additions help integrate IBM’s service with OpenWhisk. API Connect, which became generally available in late 2016, manages APIs through multiple parts of their lifecycles: creation, running, management, and analysis/monetization.

API Connect allows APIs to be created via Swagger definitions or through a design tool provided by IBM. Per-product API versioning is built into the system, along with the ability to separate APIs by purpose—for example, dev vs. test API sets—or with team-based access controls.

. IBM is trying to make a case that OpenWhisk is a better target for serverless deployment, in the same manner container services built on open technologies are a more appealing long-term home ground for application development than proprietary cloud tech.

When open isn’t everything

The real value of using an open-standard platform in a cloud service is being able to deploy simultaneously to , without having to rework the deployment to fit the quirks of each target cloud. It’s the same with lambda/serverless/function-as-a-service architectures: The functions themselves may be the same, but deployment and management aren’t.

OpenWhisk solves the problem by providing an open source underpinning for function as a service, much like Kubernetes providing a consistent open source underlay for container management as a service. But the other big clouds have already sunk a fair amount of time and investment into their existing solutions. Those are often open enough to pass muster, especially for a technology that has a narrower use case than containers or VMs.

. The project already supports IBM OpenWhisk and includes a plugin architecture that theoretically makes it possible to spin in flanking support for services like API Connect.